WireGuard on mobile, battery drain comparison update

WireGuard on mobile, battery drain comparison update

Instant

New member
Short answer: tested a bunch of providers with WireGuard on mobile. Big shocker. Some barely sip battery, others devour it faster than my ad budget gets spent. Thought I'd share what I found, in case anyone else is fighting with the same PITA. ProtonVPN and Mullvad? Great on battery. NordVPN? Kinda meh. Surfshark? Blew through juice like it was free. Protocols are not all equal, even when using WireGuard. Seems like some apps are just better optimized. TL;DR: pick your provider wisely, test for your use case, don't assume all WireGuard configs are the same. Hope this saves someone from wasting hours. Still fighting with this for a campaign - I swear, VPNs are the gift that keeps on giving.
 
Some barely sip battery, others devour it faster t
I gotta say, that phrase rubs me the wrong way. It's not really about some VPNs being better or worse, it's about how they're optimized for your device and use case. Saying some "devour" battery while others "sip" makes it sound like it's all just about the app, but really it's about how the protocol is implemented and how much background process is running. Don't forget, you can tweak settings or even try different profiles to optimize battery life. It's not just about picking a provider, it's about tuning it right for what you need
 
It's not just about picking a provider, it's about tuning it right for what you need
Yeah, tuning it right is like trying to get a PBN to rank without killing your backlink profile. Some apps are just better at hiding the resource drain while others scream "look at me, I'm doing something." End of the day, it's all about balancing your juice versus the job at hand. Wouldn't be surprised if someday we find a VPN that's as optimized as a good PBN.
 
Some barely sip battery, others devour it faster t
I gotta say, that phrase rubs me the wrong way. It's not really about some VPNs being better or worse, it's about how they're optimized for your device and use case.
I get what you're saying but I think it's a bit oversimplified. Some VPNs are just built better for battery efficiency out of the box. It's not always about tuning, sometimes it's about the core app optimization. If a provider can't keep their app lean, no amount of tuning is gonna fix that. And in my experience, some devs are just better at squeezing juice out of the same protocols.
 
man people get too caught up in the details. all vpn configs are basically the same if you don't have your own data layer tight. optimize your server and your post click, not the protocol magic. spent enough on that myth. good luck with your campaign tho, you're gonna need it.
 
Short answer: tested a bunch of providers with WireGuard on mobile. Some barely sip battery, others devour it faster than my ad budget gets spent. Thought I'd share what I found, in case anyone else is fighting with the same PITA.
Yeah, the classic "some sip, some chug" saga. In the end it's mostly about how the app's built, not just the protocol. You could have the best VPN on paper but if their app's crap or not optimized for mobile, forget about battery life. And let's be real, most of us just want it to work without burning through our ROAS. Hope your tests save someone a few hours of tinkering.
 
Thought I'd share what I found, in case anyone else is fighting with the same PITA
lol I swear VPN battery drain is like the new black hole of tech it just sucks everything in smh. I mean you spend all this time tweaking configs and still end up with the same old pain in the ass. at this rate I might just start carrying a portable charger everywhere just to keep the phone alive while fighting with VPNs. gg though hope someone finds this info useful without losing their mind over it. funny how some apps are just more optimized than others for battery life like they got secret sauce or something. anyway good luck with your campaign, hope your phone doesn't die mid scroll.
 
Honestly back in the day we'd just throw on OpenVPN with a static IP and call it a day. Now it's a full-time job just keeping your phone from running out of juice. Pick your provider, test your configs, and don't buy into the protocol hype.
 
counterpoint: so basically we are back to the same old story. protocol selection, app optimization, hardware... smh. reminds me of back in the day when all we cared about was signal strength and not the junk behind it. if only more people tested their actual setup instead of blindly trusting the hype
 
RIP to the myth that protocol alone is king here. It's all about app optimization and how the provider's network handles the traffic. Proton and Mullvad? probably tweaked their code for mobile, so they sip, not gulp. Nord?
 
Honestly back in the day we'd just throw on OpenVPN with a static IP and call it a day. Now it's a full-time job just keeping your phone from running out of juice.
BUT is it really the VPNs draining your battery or just the fact that everyone is running background apps, location services and endless notifications? I swear sometimes people blame the VPN when their phones are basically a pocket-sized server farm. Maybe the real solution is turning off half that crap and actually optimizing your device instead of chasing the perfect protocol.
 
I gotta disagree a little. It's not just app optimization or provider tweaks. The protocol itself is a big part of it. WireGuard is lighter than OpenVPN but still not magic. Some providers just don't tune their configs right or don't optimize for mobile.
 
Tried a bunch more providers. Noticed some apps still lag behind even with good configs. Switched some devices to lower power modes, helped a bit but not much. Bottom line: the app's optimization matters more than the provider. Still a PITA to find the perfect combo.
 
Back
Top